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Self-interest   /sɛlf-ˈɪntrəst/   Listen
Self-interest

noun
1.
Taking advantage of opportunities without regard for the consequences for others.  Synonyms: expedience, opportunism, self-seeking.
2.
Concern for your own interests and welfare.  Synonyms: egocentrism, egoism, self-centeredness, self-concern.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Self-interest" Quotes from Famous Books



... impending, they were usually prevented by some agreement between the parties; for instance, if a negro man had married a woman belonging to another planter, a compromise was generally effected by the purchase of one of the parties, regardless of self-interest on the part of the owners. Thus families were kept together without regard to any pecuniary loss. Public sentiment was against the severing ...
— Plantation Sketches • Margaret Devereux

... which belongs to the period of shaving, whereas their deliverance consisted in the fact that their linen and woollen goods were not consumed, his own deliverance lay in precisely the opposite result. But convenience, that admirable branch system from the main line of self-interest, makes us all fellow-helpers in spite of adverse resolutions. It is probable that no speculative or theological hatred would be ultimately strong enough to resist the persuasive power of convenience: that a latitudinarian baker, whose bread ...
— Scenes of Clerical Life • George Eliot

... masquerading as virtue. His foremost duty was to pluck the mask from the false virtues which strutted everywhere through the society and literature of France. Voltaire recognized nothing else in La Rochefoucauld but this sardonic misanthropy, this determination to prove that man is guided solely by self-interest. This Voltaire thought was the seule verite contained in the "Maximes," and in a measure he was right. The moralist saw amour-propre as an Apollyon straddling right across the pathway of mankind; he saw lies flourish ...
— Three French Moralists and The Gallantry of France • Edmund Gosse

... of Reform would not have been nearly so well supported as it was, had it not been for the fact that the abuses which existed touched the self-interest of many persons who were by no means Reformers at heart, and who in fact cared nothing about responsible government. The first successful attack which was made on the existing order of things was with regard ...
— Wilmot and Tilley • James Hannay

... science, will act for the common good, with the same mechanical certainty as bees; though the common good of the human hive would perhaps not be easy to define. But in the meantime mankind, or some portions of it, may be in danger of an anarchy of self-interest, compressed for the purpose of political order, by a ...
— Lectures and Essays • Goldwin Smith


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